In re Marriage of Oettel

2022 IL App (4th) 200404-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 4, 2022
Docket4-20-0404
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2022 IL App (4th) 200404-U (In re Marriage of Oettel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Marriage of Oettel, 2022 IL App (4th) 200404-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

NOTICE This Order was filed under FILED 2022 IL App (4th) 200404-U April 4, 2022 Supreme Court Rule 23 and is Carla Bender not precedent except in the NO. 4-20-0404 4th District Appellate limited circumstances allowed Court, IL under Rule 23(e)(1). IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

In re MARRIAGE OF ) Appeal from the DAWN M. OETTEL, ) Circuit Court of Petitioner-Appellee, ) Sangamon County and ) No. 16D458 JOSEPH S. OETTEL, ) Respondent-Appellant. ) Honorable ) Jack D. Davis II, ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE DeARMOND delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Knecht and Justice Turner concurred in the judgment.

ORDER ¶1 Held: The trial court’s order of June 6, 2019, was an enforcement order and not a modification of the property division of a previously entered judgment of dissolution of marriage, and the court’s order of July 22, 2020, was neither a modification of that order nor of the prior judgment.

¶2 After several years of litigation, the parties were divorced in February 2018, and

as part of the judgment, the trial court entered an order establishing maintenance and dividing the

marital property of the parties between them. Postjudgment litigation then proceeded primarily

on those two issues. Petitioner, Dawn M. Oettel (Dawn), filed several petitions seeking

enforcement of the court’s orders, which resulted in subsequent orders entered by the trial court

on June 6, 2019, and July 22, 2020. Respondent, Joseph S. Oettel (Joe), argued the trial court’s

orders were modifications of the original property division and that the trial court lacked jurisdiction so long after entry of the judgment. Dawn argued, and the trial court found, instead,

the orders were efforts to enforce the terms of the court’s previous judgment.

¶3 On appeal, Joe continues to claim the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter the

July 22, 2020, order because it sought to modify the terms of the June 6, 2019, order, both of

which are improper attempts to modify the terms of a property division. We disagree.

¶4 I. BACKGROUND

¶5 The parties were married on July 23, 1994, and the marriage was dissolved by a

judgment of dissolution of marriage (Judgment) entered February 13, 2018. The property

division regarding the marital residence (Falcon Point) required the residence to remain listed for

sale and for both parties to cooperate with the realtor to market it. Respondent, who continued to

occupy the residence, was responsible for all mortgage payments, utilities, property taxes, and

“other reasonable expenses associated with his residence at the home.” Upon sale and

satisfaction of any indebtedness on the home, Joe was entitled to reimbursement for one-half the

cost of any repairs made, as well as any paydown on the principal, and the parties would split the

net proceeds evenly. A commercial property (Iles property), also subject to sale and division, is

not directly involved in the issues raised by this appeal. We take the time to outline the

procedural history of the litigation in some detail to elucidate the circumstances surrounding the

challenged orders in this appeal.

¶6 After the Judgment was entered, petitioner sought to obtain Joe’s compliance with

the terms of the Judgment as it related to the sale of the residence, leading ultimately to hearings

in February and April 2019 on a series of pleadings filed by Dawn seeking enforcement or

modification of the Judgment and findings of contempt against Joe. Written arguments of the

parties were submitted in May 2019, with Joe contending, among other things, Dawn’s

-2- suggestions for relief “[are] an attempt to redo the property division of the Judgment *** for

which the court lacks jurisdiction and the ability to do so.”

¶7 Those suggestions included Joe buying out her interest in the marital residence by

establishing her share of equity based on a reduced price of $505,000, a proposal Joe approved,

minus any credits to which Joe was entitled for repairs and payments in accordance with the

terms of the Judgment, or, if unable to obtain financing to do so, payment of her share upon sale

of the commercial property. Dawn also suggested reducing the price of the Falcon Point property

to an amount consistent with the realtor’s recommendations and selling the property “as is”

without the various repairs otherwise considered necessary before sale.

¶8 Dawn argued her suggested remedies were not an improper modification of the

property division but instead, consistent with the trial court’s retained jurisdiction to enforce its

own orders. She also argued both parties had “revested” jurisdiction in the trial court by

presenting evidence on the issue without objection by the other.

¶9 The trial court’s written order, filed in June 2019, found Joe was in indirect civil

contempt for failing to pay maintenance as ordered, granted his request for a downward

modification of maintenance, granted his request to address an Internal Revenue Service debt by

requiring the parties to amend their tax returns, and found Joe in indirect civil contempt for

failing to comply with the court’s previous order regarding the listing of the Iles property.

Addressing the Falcon Point residence, the trial court began by noting the terms of the previous

order and held, “[b]ased upon the evidence, the court finds Joe has failed to cooperate with the

recommendations of the realtor concerning lowering the sales price” and has “refused to

cooperate with the marketing of the marital residence.” The trial court declined to find Joe in

contempt in this regard, as requested by Dawn, because it also found “he did not have the

-3- resources necessary to address the repairs.” The trial court recognized Joe’s claim the court no

longer had jurisdiction to modify the division of property and that Dawn’s request amounted to

an impermissible modification of the Judgment’s property division but disagreed, finding it

retained jurisdiction to enforce the terms of the Judgment.

¶ 10 The trial court ordered Joe to buy out Dawn’s interest in the Falcon Point

residence, valued at the suggested price of $505,000, by securing financing within 45 days

sufficient to pay Dawn her equity share minus “any bona fide credits he may have under the

provisions of the Judgment.” Alternatively, if unable to obtain financing, Dawn was to receive

her share of the equity (minus credits due Joe) from the sale of the Iles property. No posttrial

motions were filed and no appeal taken from the court’s ruling of June 2019.

¶ 11 Dawn filed a supplemental petition for rule to show cause in early April 2020 and

a motion for entry of judgment later in the same month. In the supplemental petition she alleged,

among other things, that Joe failed to obtain the necessary financing to purchase her interest in

the Falcon Point residence or explain his inability to do so, and he failed to cooperate with the

realtor to show the residence to an interested party. Dawn claimed Joe was “attempting to delay

and prevent sale of the residence, thus preventing the Petitioner from receiving funds due her,”

and she asked the trial court to order Joe to reduce the sale price to the previously recommended

$505,000 to increase the likelihood of sale. The motion for judgment asked that judgment be

entered on the amounts owed by the trial court’s previously ordered buy-out, as well as amounts

owed in unpaid spousal support and attorney fees.

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Bluebook (online)
2022 IL App (4th) 200404-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-oettel-illappct-2022.